Fifty years ago, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater made a historic run for president. He didn’t win, but his campaign launched the modern conservative movement. And his experience taught him lessons that conservatives today should heed.

With every passing day, it becomes more apparent that we live in an age of hollow justice. This is especially so in the highest court of the land, the U.S. Supreme Court, which is more concerned with protecting the powerful than upholding our rights.

“[P]rogressives make the lives of poor and minority Americans worse–much worse. Shove this fact in their faces every time you open your mouth to speak. Here is the mantra: In every inner city, the selfish exploiters of the poor are Democrats, progressives, and so-called liberals, and they have been for fifty to a hundred years. Democrats fatten themselves on the votes of the poor while blocking their opportunities for a better life.”

Equal parts thriller, political commentary and tragedy, ‘Trapped Under the Sea’ takes you inside one of the most complex construction projects in American history: that of the almost 10-mile long sewage tunnel deep beneath Boston Harbor from the city’s Deer Island Treatment Plant to the Atlantic Ocean.

A thought-provoking, at times claustrophobia-inducing, gut-wrenching story of five blue collar underwater construction workers on whose backs a multi-billion dollar multi-year construction project rests. Their lives would never be the same.